Institutions
|
About Us
|
Help
|
Gaeilge
0
1000
Home
Browse
Advanced Search
Search History
Marked List
Statistics
A
A
A
Show search options
Hide search options
Search using:
All
Any
None of these
Exact Phrase
in
Keyword (All Fields)
Title
Author
Subject
Institution
Funder
All
Any
None of these
Exact Phrase
in
Keyword (All Fields)
Title
Author
Subject
Institution
Funder
All
Any
None of these
Exact Phrase
in
Keyword (All Fields)
Title
Author
Subject
Institution
Funder
From
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
1993
1992
1991
1990
1989
1988
1987
1986
1985
1984
1983
1982
1981
1980
1979
1978
1977
1976
1975
1974
1973
1972
1971
1970
1969
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1963
1962
1961
1960
1959
1958
1957
1956
1955
1954
1953
1952
1951
1950
1949
1948
1947
1946
1944
1943
1942
1941
1940
1939
1938
1937
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1928
1927
1925
1923
1920
1919
1917
1915
1914
1913
1912
1911
1909
1908
1907
1906
1905
1904
1903
1902
1901
1900
1899
1898
1897
1896
1895
1894
1893
1892
1891
1890
1889
1888
1887
1886
1885
1884
1883
1882
1881
1880
1879
1878
1877
1876
1875
1874
1873
1872
1871
1870
1869
1867
1866
1865
1864
1862
1861
1859
1858
1857
1856
1855
1854
1853
1852
1851
1849
To
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
1993
1992
1991
1990
1989
1988
1987
1986
1985
1984
1983
1982
1981
1980
1979
1978
1977
1976
1975
1974
1973
1972
1971
1970
1969
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1963
1962
1961
1960
1959
1958
1957
1956
1955
1954
1953
1952
1951
1950
1949
1948
1947
1946
1944
1943
1942
1941
1940
1939
1938
1937
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1928
1927
1925
1923
1920
1919
1917
1915
1914
1913
1912
1911
1909
1908
1907
1906
1905
1904
1903
1902
1901
1900
1899
1898
1897
1896
1895
1894
1893
1892
1891
1890
1889
1888
1887
1886
1885
1884
1883
1882
1881
1880
1879
1878
1877
1876
1875
1874
1873
1872
1871
1870
1869
1867
1866
1865
1864
1862
1861
1859
1858
1857
1856
1855
1854
1853
1852
1851
1849
Optionally, filter by:
(Leave unchecked to search all fields)
Item Type
Book
Book chapter
Conference item
Contribution to newspaper/magazine
Doctoral thesis
Journal article
Master thesis (research)
Master thesis (taught)
Multimedia
Patent
Report
Review
Working paper
Other
Peer Review Status
Peer reviewed
Non peer reviewed
Unknown
Institution
Dublin City University
Dublin Institute of Technology
NUI Galway
NUI Maynooth
Trinity College Dublin
University College Cork
University College Dublin
University of Limerick
Funder
Enterprise Ireland (EI)
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Health Research Board (HRB)
Higher Education Authority (HEA)
Irish Aid
Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences (IRCHSS)
Irish Research Council for Science Engineering and Technology (IRCSET)
Marine Institute
Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
Teagasc
Language
Irish
English
Danish
French
German
Interlingue; Occidental
Italian
Japanese
Spanish; Castilian
Current Search:
'Economics' in all fields;
1369 items found
Sort by
Relevance
Title
Author
Item type
Date
Institution
Peer review status
Language
Order
Ascending
Descending
25
50
100
per page
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Bibtex
CSV
EndNote
RefWorks
RIS
XML
Displaying Results 51 - 75 of 1369 on page 3 of 55
Marked
Mark
Dividend payout and corporate governance along the corporate life-cycle. Economics Finance & Accounting Working Paper Series N228-12
(2012)
O'Connor, Thomas
Dividend payout and corporate governance along the corporate life-cycle. Economics Finance & Accounting Working Paper Series N228-12
(2012)
O'Connor, Thomas
Abstract:
Manuscript Type: Empirical Research Question/Issue: This study seeks to test the outcome and substitution agency models of dividends at different stages of the corporate life-cycle. Research Findings/Insights: In a sample of 220 firms from 21 emerging market countries, I show that the outcome model of dividends, which predicts that dividend payout increases in the strength of shareholder rights, prevails all along the corporate life-cycle, but only where creditor rights are strong. Hence, the agency cost of equity and debt version of the outcome model of dividends holds. I find no evidence in support of the substitution model of dividends. Theoretical/Academic Implications: The findings in this paper serve to highlight the profound influence that creditors exert on corporate payout policy. When shareholders enjoy considerable legal rights, but not so creditors, creditors demand, and firms consent to lower dividends. Furthermore, I find no evidence to suggest that firms substitu...
http://eprints.nuim.ie/3805/
Marked
Mark
Dividend payout and corporate governance in emerging markets: which governance provisions matter? Department of Economics Finance & Accounting Working Paper Series N230-12
(2012)
O'Connor, Thomas
Dividend payout and corporate governance in emerging markets: which governance provisions matter? Department of Economics Finance & Accounting Working Paper Series N230-12
(2012)
O'Connor, Thomas
Abstract:
In this paper I examine the relationship between individual corporate governance provisions and corporate dividend payout. Using a sample of 220 firms from 21 emerging market countries, I show that dividend payout is an outcome of strong corporate governance. On closer inspection, I find that dividend payouts tend to be greater in firms which score highly in measures of board independence and accountability. I find some evidence which suggests that dividends substitute for a lack of transparency for emerging market firms.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/3807/
Marked
Mark
Methods for studying dominance and inequality in population health
(2012)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Methods for studying dominance and inequality in population health
(2012)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This paper reviews methods for studying dominance and inequality in health economics. It concentrates on “pure inequality” as opposed to inequality which is related to income or some other measure of household resources. The paper reviews methods for cases when health can be measured cardinally and ordinally. There is also a brief review of statistical inference in this area.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/3714
Marked
Mark
Leaving Certificate points and performance in first arts economics : a study of the 1987/88 U.C.D. class
(1989)
Walsh, Brendan M.; Garvey, Padhraic
Leaving Certificate points and performance in first arts economics : a study of the 1987/88 U.C.D. class
(1989)
Walsh, Brendan M.; Garvey, Padhraic
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1463
Marked
Mark
Between morality and rationality: an analysis of interpersonal economics in rural Ireland
(1996)
Salazar, Carles
Between morality and rationality: an analysis of interpersonal economics in rural Ireland
(1996)
Salazar, Carles
Abstract:
Social scientists interested in peasant societies have tried to make sense of their economies in terms of the "political" and "moral" economy paradigms. I t is the aim of this paper to assess critically the applicability of such models to the informal sector of Irish family farms and, in so doing, to postulate the necessity of a different theoretical approach. The simplistic dichotomy between "rational" and "moral" behaviour is shown to fall short of a satisfactory account of economic relationships in this particular context. The complex intersection of different forms of rationality on an Irish family farm, half-way between peasant and capitalist agricultural producers, calls for newer and less rigid hypotheses
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/64765
Marked
Mark
Analyzing gender-based differential advantage: a gendered model of emerging and constructed opportunities.
(1998)
Steele, Scott R.
Analyzing gender-based differential advantage: a gendered model of emerging and constructed opportunities.
(1998)
Steele, Scott R.
Abstract:
This paper develops and uses the Model of Emerging and Constructed Opportunities (MECO) to analyze the emergence of systematic institutional and gender-based differential advantage. Using an evolutionary process with reference group effects, certain household power relations that are "less fit" are abandoned in favor of household power relations that are "more fit." The model illustrates processes whereby institutional and gender-based differential advantage could emerge: (1) through stochastic processes if different genders experience asymmetric shocks affecting their economic opportunity; (2) as the result of gender-based differences in investment bias; or (3) as the result of gender-based differences in responses to servility. The evolutionary process in the MECO is one where agents within households see themselves as servile if they have less ability to influence the allocation of resources in their household than their peers. When agents deem themselves as s...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1683
Marked
Mark
Encouraging Attendence in Tutorials for Quantity Surveying Studies Through Assessment
(2011)
Kehily, Dermot
Encouraging Attendence in Tutorials for Quantity Surveying Studies Through Assessment
(2011)
Kehily, Dermot
Abstract:
<p>Construction Economics and Management in Dublin Institute of Technology (DIT) educates and prepares students to become Quantity Surveyors (Construction Economists) in the Construction Industry. Arguably the most important subject on the course and the cornerstone of the profession is the ability of the students and graduates to carry out a technical function called ‘measurement’ or ‘take off’ from construction plans and drawings. Graduates of Construction Economics and Management may spend up to two years carrying out measurement for their employers before they progress to the more professional practices of Quantity Surveying. The importance of measurement and take off inthe profession cannot be overstated and thus the subject is included in all four years of the Construction Economics and Management Degree in The School of Real Estate and Construction Economics in DIT. The functions outlined above are delivered in the second year of the course inQuantity Surveying Studies ...
http://arrow.dit.ie/beschreccon/1
Marked
Mark
Fabricating economic development
(2009)
Brownlow, Graham
Fabricating economic development
(2009)
Brownlow, Graham
Abstract:
This paper is concerned with the institutions of Irish economics; it is structured around two arguments each of which links to the thesis presented in Garvin’s Preventing the future (2004). Overall it will be demonstrated that Irish economics was shaped by intellectual trends experienced within economic thought globally as well as the social considerations that were peculiar to Ireland. The evidence presented indicates that firstly while Economic Development mattered to the Irish economy it did not matter for the reasons that most writers have suggested it did. It is argued for instance that much of the literature, regardless of academic discipline, presents the publication of Economic Development in 1958 as analogous to a “big bang” event in the creation of modern Ireland. However, such a “big bang” perspective misrepresents the sophistication of economic debates prior to Whitaker’s report as well as distorting the interpretation of subsequent developments. The paper secondly, by d...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2343
Marked
Mark
Neo-Keynesian macroeconomics in an open economy
(1989)
Neary, J. Peter
Neo-Keynesian macroeconomics in an open economy
(1989)
Neary, J. Peter
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1465
Marked
Mark
Social Networks and the national art gallery (Dublin|...|Sofia)
(2010)
MAC an AIRCHINNIGH, MICHEAL
Social Networks and the national art gallery (Dublin|...|Sofia)
(2010)
MAC an AIRCHINNIGH, MICHEAL
Abstract:
To publish is to make public. And one sense of being public is surely to be accessible? Today it is not only the writing and the images that are published formally, that is to say through official channels, but also the casual human artefacts, the chat, the blog, the quick pic, the self-made music and dance and film, and all of the latter through the medium of the social network. In the World-Wide Web (WWW), to be published is to have a unique resource identifier (URI) and usually a unique resource locator (URL). But to be visibly published on the WWW one needs to be found (much in the same way that one might be found say, 200 years ago, through the library catalogue). Hence at the very core of electronic publishing is to be found the metadata nucleus. In olden times the scholar/reader would have to travel to that place, the Library, if it were accessible, to read/study the work. Today, (s)he travels electronically to those places which are accessible. E-publication does not necessa...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/39172
Marked
Mark
Captive Offshoring by U.S. Multinationals: Measuring the Domestic Employment Impacts of Vertical FDI
(2010)
Mullen, John K.
Captive Offshoring by U.S. Multinationals: Measuring the Domestic Employment Impacts of Vertical FDI
(2010)
Mullen, John K.
Abstract:
The pervasive and complex nature of "international outsourcing" has hampered efforts to quantify the importance of this phenomenon for national economies. Indeed, available evidence on the extent of "offshoring" associated with the U.S. economy is scant, rendering analyses of its economic impacts as unreliable at best. Attempts to gauge its direct employment effects must overcome definitional problems and data limitations, even if one ignores the immeasurable dimensions of this issue. The present study offers insight into the nature and extent of "captive offshoring" in relation to the entire U.S. economy. Using government data that report foreign affiliate sales back to U.S. parent firms, we provide a "ballpark" estimate of the potential for domestic employment loss associated with this type of foreign investment activity.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1441
Marked
Mark
The Rise and Fall of the Irish Orange Roughy Fishery: An Economic Analysis
(2010)
Foley, Naomi; van Rensburg, Thomas; Armstrong, Claire
The Rise and Fall of the Irish Orange Roughy Fishery: An Economic Analysis
(2010)
Foley, Naomi; van Rensburg, Thomas; Armstrong, Claire
Abstract:
An Irish commercial fishery for orange roughy began in the Northeast Atlantic in 2001 with the assistance of government grants. The fishery began as an open access, non-quota fishery. The rapid boom and bust of many deep water fisheries was experienced. Landings peaked in 2002 and then dropped significantly the following year. Many vessels were forced out of the fishery due to high costs and rapidly declining stocks. By 2005 the fishery was largely closed. We present why the fishery no longer exists with a bioeconomic analysis and we discuss both the external and opportunity costs of the fishery. A bioeconomic model is applied to the available data to assess the open access effort and harvest with and without government grant aid. The results suggest that in the absence of subsidies, deep water trawling would not have been viable. In addition to the financial costs such as high fuel consumption, there are also externalities associated with a deep water trawling. Orange roughy is clo...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1445
Marked
Mark
Proposing a formalised model for mindful information systems offshoring
(2009)
Costello, Gabriel; Donnelan, Brian
Proposing a formalised model for mindful information systems offshoring
(2009)
Costello, Gabriel; Donnelan, Brian
Abstract:
The central thesis of this paper is that Mathematical Economics can provide a novel approach to the examination of offshoring business decisions and provide an impetus for future research in the area. A growing body of research indicates that projected cost savings from IT offshoring projects are not being met. Furthermore, evidence suggests that decision-making processes have been more emotional than rational, and that many offshoring arrangements have been rushed into without adequate analysis of the true costs involved. Building on the concept of mindfulness and mindlessness introduced to the IS literature by Swanson and Ramiller, a cost equation is developed using ¿deductive reasoning rather than inductive study¿ in the tradition of mathematical economics. The model endeavours to capture a wide range of both the quantitative and qualitative parameters. Although the economic model is illustrated against the background of a European scenario, the theoretical framework is generic a...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1571
Marked
Mark
The impact of the exchange rate regime on exports: evidence from the European Monetary System.
(1999)
Fountas, Stilianos
The impact of the exchange rate regime on exports: evidence from the European Monetary System.
(1999)
Fountas, Stilianos
Abstract:
We employ the econometric techniques of multivariate cointegration and errorcorrection models to investigate the impact of the creation of the European Monetary System (EMS) on the volume of intra-European Union (EU) exports for eight EU countries. We find that for France, Germany and Ireland, the EMS boosted the volume of intra-EU exports. In the rest of the countries, there has not been a significant effect. Another important result is that exchange rate volatility had no statistically significant long-run or short-run effect on the volume of intra-EU exports in the majority of the countries in our study.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1687
Marked
Mark
The Monetary Transmission Mechanism: evidence and implications for European monetary union.
(1999)
Fountas, Stilianos
The Monetary Transmission Mechanism: evidence and implications for European monetary union.
(1999)
Fountas, Stilianos
Abstract:
We provide some evidence consistent with a heterogeneous credit channel of monetary policy transmission in the European Union. Using the techniques of cointegration and Error Correction Models, we have shown that the external finance premium is one important leading indicator of real economic activity in some EU countries, namely, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Italy and the Netherlands. No evidence is found for Belgium, France, Germany and the UK. These findings imply that a common monetary policy implemented by the European Central Bank might be transmitted in different ways across the member countries of the monetary union, thus exacerbating existing regional disparities among the member countries.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1686
Marked
Mark
Real interest-rate parity under regime shifts: evidence for industrial countries.
(1998)
Fountas, Stilianos; Wu, Jyh-Lin
Real interest-rate parity under regime shifts: evidence for industrial countries.
(1998)
Fountas, Stilianos; Wu, Jyh-Lin
Abstract:
We use recently developed cointegration tests that determine endogenously the regime shift to test for bilateral real interest rate convergence (real interest rate parity) in the G7 against the US in the 1974-1995 period. In contrast with previous studies that employed classical regression analysis and standard cointegration tests, our innovative approach provides strong evidence in favour of bilateral real interest rate convergence between the US and several countries in our sample, in particular for short-term real interest rates. Our results highlight the fact that for a number of countries in our sample (Canada and the UK) monetary policy can act as a stabilisation policy tool through its effect on domestic long-term real interest rates while for others (France and Germany) long-term real interest rate changes are significantly influenced by the US monetary policy stance.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1684
Marked
Mark
Subsidies in Irish fisheries: saving rural Ireland? (
(1998)
Wiium, Vilhjalmur
Subsidies in Irish fisheries: saving rural Ireland? (
(1998)
Wiium, Vilhjalmur
Abstract:
Subsidies in the world's fishing industry have long been considered to have harmful effects on fish stocks. The fishing industry has suffered from overcapacity for many years, and subsidies encourage investment, leading to greater capacity and more pressure on fish stocks, many of which are already exploited close to extinction. However, this paper argues, that not all fishery subsidies have this effect on the fish resource. In Ireland, there is evidence suggesting that fishery subsidies are used increasingly for the purpose of employment creation in disadvantaged regions, through land-based investments, rather than to increase fishing capacity. Abolishing fishery subsidies in Ireland is, therefore, not likely to have huge effects on the fishing fleet, while the effects on rural communities could be grave. For politicians ever to consider the removal of subsidies, alternative policies must be developed to assist people that live in disadvantaged regions.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1685
Marked
Mark
Modelling access to the Irish Coastline: a contingent behavioural approach.
(2010)
Barry, Luke; Van Rensburgh, Tom; Hynes, Stephen
Modelling access to the Irish Coastline: a contingent behavioural approach.
(2010)
Barry, Luke; Van Rensburgh, Tom; Hynes, Stephen
Abstract:
This paper measures willingness to pay (WTP) for public access and trail improvements to a coastal recreational site in the west of Ireland. The Contingent Behaviour model is used to measure the increased number of trips associated with improved public access using recreational trails along a stretch of Irish coastline. Results show that improving access through the use of trails increases consumer surplus by 111.15 euro per person per annum. We argue that in designing new regulation such as Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) for the management of Ireland¿s coastline, an understanding of the values the Irish public place on coastal recreational access will be important to manage the resource in a sustainable manner.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1937
Marked
Mark
The spatial relationship between economic activity and river water quality
(2010)
O'Donoghue, Cathal; Howley, Peter; Hynes, Stephen; Fealy, Réamonn; Chyzheuskaya, A...
The spatial relationship between economic activity and river water quality
(2010)
O'Donoghue, Cathal; Howley, Peter; Hynes, Stephen; Fealy, Réamonn; Chyzheuskaya, Aksana; Green, Stuart; Meredith, David; Morrissey, Karyn
Abstract:
This paper, using Ireland as a case study, examines the relationship between economic activities and river water quality. The stipulation from the EU water framework directive (WFD) that all surface waters in the EU must be of 'good ecological status' by 2015 necessitate a quantitative understanding of the major determinants of water quality. Within this context, this paper combines a number of spatial datasets relating to agricultural, residential and industrial activities as well as the level of forest cover to examine the major economic influences on the ecological quality of water resources. It is hoped that providing a comprehensive understanding of the effect of a variety of economic activities that influence the ecological quality of water will be an important tool in the management of risk and will allow for more appropriate land use planning aimed at restoring and maintaining water quality as required by the WFD. Results indicate that the level of forestry, indust...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1941
Marked
Mark
A Geographical Information System approach to defining economic coastal zones in Ireland
(2010)
Hynes, Stephen; Farrelly, Niall
A Geographical Information System approach to defining economic coastal zones in Ireland
(2010)
Hynes, Stephen; Farrelly, Niall
Abstract:
In order to develop a policy framework and guidelines for improving a national approach to the management of Irish coastal regions and associated resources one first needs to be able to define what is meant by 'a coastal region' in an Irish context and secondly to know how the socio-economic characteristics of Irish coastal populations differ from the national perspective. This paper contains a range of official socioeconomic statistics, from a range of existing statistical domains, compiled for the first time in terms of Irish coastal regions. These coastal regions are defined at a number of alternative levels of spatial aggregation. The compilation of such data is important when one considers the recommendations of the European Council and Parliament concerning the implementation of Integrated Coastal Zone Management and the requirements of policies such as Integrated Maritime Policy for the European Union and the EU Marine Framework Strategy Directive.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1940
Marked
Mark
A stimulating annealing approach to non-market environmental benefit aggregation.
(2010)
Hynes, Stephen
A stimulating annealing approach to non-market environmental benefit aggregation.
(2010)
Hynes, Stephen
Abstract:
This paper considers the use of a 'combinatorial optimization' technique in the aggregation of environmental benefit values. Combinatorial optimization is used to statistically match population census data to a Contingent Valuation survey. The matched survey and census information is then used to produce regional and national total WTP figures. These figures are then compared to figures derived using more standard approaches to calculating aggregate environment benefit values. The choice of aggregation approach is shown to have a major impact upon estimates of total benefits at a regional level, especially when the target population displays considerable heterogeneity across space.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1943
Marked
Mark
Personal versus societal preferences in contingent valuation assessments
(2010)
Howley, Peter; Hynes, Stephen; O'Donoghue, Cathal
Personal versus societal preferences in contingent valuation assessments
(2010)
Howley, Peter; Hynes, Stephen; O'Donoghue, Cathal
Abstract:
Contingent valuation has been used extensively in estimating the value of environmental goods. One criticism of this approach, however, is that respondents in referendum-style contingent valuation surveys may express citizen assessments that take into account benefits to others rather than benefits that accrue purely to the respondent themselves. Within this context, the aim of this paper is to examine to what extent individuals express different preferences when adopting a personal or a social/citizen perspective. While this paper provides some support for the hypothesis that individuals express different preferences when adopting collective as opposed to personal choices, reported willingness to pay (WTP) was found to be insensitive to whether or not the respondents were asked the WTP question from a personal or social perspective.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1938
Marked
Mark
The Role of Decision-Making Biases in Ireland's Banking Crisis
(2011)
LUNN, PETE
The Role of Decision-Making Biases in Ireland's Banking Crisis
(2011)
LUNN, PETE
Abstract:
This paper considers Ireland's banking crisis from the perspective of behavioural economics. It assesses whether known biases in judgement and decision-making were instrumental in the development and severity of the crisis. It investigates evidence that key decision-makers, including consumers, businesspeople, bankers and regulators, as well as parties such as civil servants, politicians, academics and journalists, were influenced by seven specific phenomena which have been identified previously via experiments and field studies. It concludes that evidence is consistent with the influence of these established phenomena. Ireland's long boom, rapid financial integration and lack of relevant past experience may have increased the vulnerability of decision-makers to economic and financial reasoning that proved disadvantageous. The analysis has potential implications for attempts to prevent future crises.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/56169
Marked
Mark
Love Thy Neighbor as Thyself: Community Formation and the Church
(2010)
Jeitschko, Thomas D.; O’Connell, Séamus; Pecchenino, Rowena A.
Love Thy Neighbor as Thyself: Community Formation and the Church
(2010)
Jeitschko, Thomas D.; O’Connell, Séamus; Pecchenino, Rowena A.
Abstract:
The church has played a central role in establishing and maintaining, as well as undermining, communities throughout modern history. In this paper we explore some of the mechanisms through which the church can coordinate individual behavior to achieve improvements in individual and social welfare, and reveal the ways in which the church can fail, causing established communities to founder or dissolve. In our model inherently religious individuals may become trapped in a secular equilibrium that is strictly dominated by a religious equilibrium in which individuals’ actions bestow positive external benefits on other community members. The church, via its teachings, clergy and ministries, reveals the benefits of coordinated behavior, both in this world and in the world to come, and the costs of uncoordinated behavior, separation from God and one’s fellow man, to induce community members to take actions which are both individually and socially beneficial. External forces, such as the st...
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2648/
Marked
Mark
Introduction to the Special Issue
(2006)
Neary, J. Peter
Introduction to the Special Issue
(2006)
Neary, J. Peter
Abstract:
Brendan Walsh retired in May 2005 from the Chair of Applied Economics and the National Economics of Ireland which he had held at University College Dublin since 1980. During that time his academic and popular writings confirmed his position as a scholar of international renown and the foremost commentator on the Irish economy. To mark his retirement and to celebrate his achievements, a conference was held at University College Dublin on October 7 2005, at which papers were presented by his former students and colleagues on a wide range of topics relating to the Irish and world economies. This issue of The Economic and Social Review contains the edited proceedings of the conference.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/61916
Displaying Results 51 - 75 of 1369 on page 3 of 55
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Bibtex
CSV
EndNote
RefWorks
RIS
XML
Item Type
Book (10)
Book chapter (26)
Conference item (55)
Doctoral thesis (21)
Journal article (221)
Master thesis (research) (5)
Master thesis (taught) (1)
Multimedia (2)
Report (67)
Review (3)
Working paper (853)
Other (105)
Institution
Dublin City University (29)
NUI Galway (177)
NUI Maynooth (190)
Trinity College Dublin (179)
University College Cork (8)
University College Dublin (675)
University of Limerick (4)
Dublin Institute of Technology (107)
Peer Review Status
Peer reviewed (399)
Non peer reviewed (934)
Unknown (36)
Year
2013 (15)
2012 (85)
2011 (130)
2010 (115)
2009 (95)
2008 (71)
2007 (77)
2006 (76)
2005 (77)
2004 (65)
2003 (49)
2002 (55)
2001 (41)
2000 (32)
1999 (30)
1998 (18)
1997 (16)
1996 (20)
1995 (23)
1994 (35)
1993 (38)
1992 (25)
1991 (19)
1990 (15)
1989 (22)
built by Enovation Solutions